Salary cap: EFL proposes League One and League Two cap on wages
- Published
League One and League Two clubs would have to operate under squad salary caps, according to proposals put forward by the English Football League.
Third-tier sides would be given a £2.5m ceiling for salaries, while the sum would be £1.25m for the fourth tier.
The plan, as , would also see clubs given automatic points deductions if players are not paid on time.
The EFL hopes to have the cap in place for the 2020-21 season.
Meanwhile, clubs would be given a vote on the introduction of maximum 20-man squads.
If approved, it would mean only 20 senior professionals at each club, with eight homegrown players - those produced from the club's academy system - within that group.
EFL chairman Rick Parry recently told MPs the game needed "a reset post-Covid", because of the prospect of a £200m hole in finances throughout the three affiliated leagues, including the Championship.
It is suggested clubs would have a season's grace in which to comply with the new measures, while clubs relegated from the Championship would also require a transition period given the disparity in player earnings and income between the second and third tiers.
Salary caps exist in English rugby union's Premiership, in which member clubs can spend £7m per season, and rugby league's Super League, which has a limit of £2.1m.